Two dead in Virginia Tech University shooting

BLACKSBURG: A gunman ambushed and killed a campus police officer and was later reported to have been found dead on Thursday at Virginia Tech University, the site of one of the worst shooting rampages in U.S. history.

Authorities declared the campus safe and lifted a lock-down after a nearly four-hour manhunt, seeming to lend credence to television news reports that a body found in a Virginia Tech parking lot was that of the shooter.

Police at a televised news conference declined to say whether they suspected a murder-suicide and offered no motive for the crime, citing an ongoing investigation.

The place where the officer was shot is in a parking lot in the shadows of the Virginia Tech football stadium. Small groups of students stood nearby as police removed yellow tape from around the crime scene on Thursday evening.

Second-year student Fuller Hoepner, 19, said he stayed inside his apartment after he saw the school`s emergency message this afternoon: "shots fired."

"We did not move. We watched the news all day," he said.

The incident evoked grim memories of April 2007 when a mentally deranged student killed 32 people and wounded 25 before committing suicide on the school`s rural campus in the Shenandoah Valley about 250 miles southwest of Washington. It was the deadliest attack by a single gunman in U.S. history.

A few dozen students gathered on Thursday evening at a memorial for that attack, talking quietly among themselves. At a stone memorializing one of the victims, a student left a note on orange paper. It read: "We are the hokies," the name of the school`s sports teams. "We will prevail."

In Thursday`s incident, the gunman walked up and shot to death a four-year veteran of the campus police force during a routine traffic stop, police said.

The man then fled on foot toward a nearby parking lot, and a body was later found there along with a gun, police said.

But Sergeant Bob Carpentieri of the Virginia State Police would not confirm the second body was that of the unidentified gunman.

He said, however, that investigators were looking at the possibility the shooter was linked to an armed robbery earlier in the day in the nearby town of Radford, Virginia.

Police, some in combat gear with assault rifles, swarmed the campus after the shooting, while students and faculty were ordered to hunker down inside university buildings and dormitories.

`Active threat` ends

Hours later, the university declared an end to an "active threat" on campus and told people to "resume normal activities."

During the lock-down, parents of students sought frantically to locate their children through cell phones and social networking sites.

"Right now it`s kind of scary and hectic around here that this is happening again," Matthew Spencer, a first-year Virginia Tech student, told a local NBC station before the all-clear was given.

U.S. House of Representatives Republican Leader Eric Cantor of Virginia was among the first members of Congress to weigh in. "Such violence is never easy to explain, and cuts to our core - especially on a campus that has experienced such grief in the past," he said.

Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell said: "I am deeply saddened by today`s news of another tragedy affecting the Virginia Tech community. Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of those impacted by these shootings."